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6bc6e2baa6
GPG emits an "untrusted key" warning when signing with a key that hasn't been assigned a trust level, which can cause verification steps to fail or produce noisy output. Example: ```sh gpg: Signature made Tue Mar 24 20:56:59 2026 UTC gpg: using RSA key 21C96B1CB950718874F64DBD6A5A671B5E40A3B9 gpg: Good signature from "Coder Release Signing Key <security@coder.com>" [unknown] gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature! gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner. Primary key fingerprint: 21C9 6B1C B950 7188 74F6 4DBD 6A5A 671B 5E40 A3B9 ``` After importing the release key, derive its fingerprint from the keyring and mark it as ultimately trusted via `--import-ownertrust`. The fingerprint is extracted dynamically rather than hard-coded, so this works for any key supplied via `CODER_GPG_RELEASE_KEY_BASE64`.
67 lines
2.3 KiB
Bash
Executable File
67 lines
2.3 KiB
Bash
Executable File
#!/usr/bin/env bash
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# This script signs a given binary using GPG.
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# It expects the binary to be signed as the first argument.
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#
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# Usage: ./sign_with_gpg.sh path/to/binary
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#
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# On success, the input file will be signed using the GPG key and the signature output file will moved to /site/out/bin/ (happens in the Makefile)
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#
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# Depends on the GPG utility. Requires the following environment variables to be set:
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# - $CODER_GPG_RELEASE_KEY_BASE64: The base64 encoded private key to use.
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set -euo pipefail
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# shellcheck source=scripts/lib.sh
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source "$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")/lib.sh"
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requiredenvs CODER_GPG_RELEASE_KEY_BASE64
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FILE_TO_SIGN="$1"
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if [[ -z "$FILE_TO_SIGN" ]]; then
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error "Usage: $0 <file_to_sign>"
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fi
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if [[ ! -f "$FILE_TO_SIGN" ]]; then
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error "File not found: $FILE_TO_SIGN"
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fi
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# Import the GPG key.
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old_gnupg_home="${GNUPGHOME:-}"
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gnupg_home_temp="$(mktemp -d)"
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export GNUPGHOME="$gnupg_home_temp"
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# Ensure GPG uses the temporary directory
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echo "$CODER_GPG_RELEASE_KEY_BASE64" | base64 -d | gpg --homedir "$gnupg_home_temp" --import 1>&2
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# Mark the imported key as ultimately trusted so GPG does not emit an
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# "untrusted key" warning during signature verification. We derive the
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# fingerprint from the keyring rather than hard-coding it so this works
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# regardless of which key is supplied.
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fingerprint="$(gpg --homedir "$gnupg_home_temp" --with-colons --fingerprint | awk -F: '/^fpr/ { print $10; exit }')"
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echo "${fingerprint}:6:" | gpg --homedir "$gnupg_home_temp" --import-ownertrust 1>&2
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# Sign the binary. This generates a file in the same directory and
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# with the same name as the binary but ending in ".asc".
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#
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# We pipe `true` into `gpg` so that it never tries to be interactive (i.e.
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# ask for a passphrase). The key we import above is not password protected.
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true | gpg --homedir "$gnupg_home_temp" --detach-sign --armor "$FILE_TO_SIGN" 1>&2
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# Verify the signature and capture the exit status
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gpg --homedir "$gnupg_home_temp" --verify "${FILE_TO_SIGN}.asc" "$FILE_TO_SIGN" 1>&2
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verification_result=$?
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# Clean up the temporary GPG home
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rm -rf "$gnupg_home_temp"
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unset GNUPGHOME
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if [[ "$old_gnupg_home" != "" ]]; then
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export GNUPGHOME="$old_gnupg_home"
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fi
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if [[ $verification_result -eq 0 ]]; then
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echo "${FILE_TO_SIGN}.asc"
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else
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error "Signature verification failed!"
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fi
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